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You
already know DEATH BY STEREO is Southern California's most savage
hardcore band, the most politically-astute dudes in all of punkdom,
and hosts of the gnarliest pit at last summer's Warped Tour. Guess
what? They're in your face all over again with Into the Valley of
Death ---13 tracks of neck-snapping metalcore anthems. "We
never tried to set any boundaries," says singer Efrem Schulz,
"this band is a process and it's just a matter of getting to
a place we like with our music. We wanted to get a new sound but
I still think this is a DEATH BY STEREO record---it's just a lot
heavier."
Take Valley's opening salvo, "Shhh-It'll Be Our Little Secret,"
an acid commentary on sexual abuse that sees frontman Efrem going
from a hush to a shriek in a heart beat while guitarist Dan Palmer
unleashes thrashy grooves and chunky riffs. An essential foundation
for this squall is Todd Hennig's tireless pummel and precision time
signatures synching with Paul Miner'schest-caving low-end. And it
only gets sicker from there: the withering "I Wouldn't Piss
in Your Ear if Your Brain Was on Fire," is a first-rate hate-mongering
jingle; "Good Morning America" is dripping with revulsion
for the Bush administration and its limp-dicked supporters in the
mainstream press; and the hackle-raising solidarity of "What
I Can't Hear, Touch, Taste Or Smell Can't Hurt Me" will have
you clapping your pierced pit partner on the back. "A lot of
the records that I liked growing up were art imitating life - and
I think a lot of bands are losing sight of that. The world has been
such a fucked up place in the last year so I really wanted Into
the Valley of Death to reflect that but also to put out the message
of individuality, that we should all think for ourselves."
In keeping with the band's no-frills DIY tradition, their very own
bassist, Paul, produced Valley all by himself, just like he did
the first DBS slab. "Even though Epitaph gave us a bigger budget
this time around, we didn't feel like wasting money on some producer
just cause he's made a name for himself. I mean, Paul's an engineer
plus he's in the band so who's more qualified to produce the record
than him?" The one indulgence the band allowed it self was
laying down the drum tracks at a legendary (and supposedly haunted)
studio deep in the San Fernando Valley, where Fleetwood Mac recorded
Rumors and countless other big-time bands changed the course of
pop-culture. "I think Nirvana did Nevermind there----they have
this one room in particular where a snare drum cracks like a rifle
report ---it just sounds so good. We were psyched just being in
place with such an incredible history."
But unlike all those more-PC-than-thou punkers, DEATH BY STEREO
are definitely not up their own asses with agendas nor are they
so serious that they've forgotten how to have a good time. "We're
all a buncha goofy dudes and so we want fans to enjoy themselves.
A lot of bands are preaching all the time, like they can't make
fun of themselves and that's a drag. I think if people come to our
shows and have a good time, then they'll go back to the lyrics and
that's when they can walk away with something." When Public
Enemy's Chuck D. said, "the revolution will not be televised,"
he was right. That's because DEATH BY STEREO are sticking it straight
inside your ear.
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